The Bible Recap - Day 246 (Ezekiel 23-24) - Year 5
Episode Date: September 3, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - For 16 Songs to Combat Anxi...ety & Fear, click here! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Ezekiel 11:3 - Sign up to receive the Priority Time Toolkit PDF SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
Transcript
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today's chapters are dark and graphic.
It's not exactly light reading, but in every heavy paragraph, in every dark chapter,
there's still something we can learn about God.
It's true on these pages, and it's true in our own stories, too.
Before we jump in, just know that I'm going to do my best
to make this appropriate for all our listeners.
The Bible itself is graphic enough,
so I'll try to go easy on explaining things in detail.
Chapter 23 is one big metaphor.
God is talking about two women,
but this isn't about women at all.
The women represent two women, but this isn't about women at all. The women represent two cities, Samaria, which is the capital city of the Northern Kingdom of Israel, and Jerusalem, which is the capital city of the Southern Kingdom of Judah.
And we've seen many times where Yahweh has portrayed his relationship with his people as a marriage, and anytime his people wander off to other gods, he compares it to adultery. He uses a picture of intimate betrayal to show what's happening on a spiritual level.
So while there definitely was sexual sin happening in both Samaria and Jerusalem, that's only
a fraction of the broader point chapter 23 is trying to make.
The major point is, the people of these cities have turned their eyes away from Yahweh,
who has always provided for them and protected them, and instead, they've looked to other nations to save them.
They've paid them tribute for protection, and as they've grown more familiar with them
and tried to earn their favor, they've also become enamored with their gods and worshiped
them instead.
Verse 7 is talking about Samaria, and it says, she defiled herself with all the idols
of everyone after whom she lusted.
It started with lust, and it ended with idle worship.
Sin always wants more from us. It's never satisfied.
We're hardwired to worship something. Whatever we spend our time thinking about and fixating on,
whatever we look to as our source of joy and fulfillment,
it will eventually get our hearts.
All along, God has been begging them to repent, but even when their sin and idolatry isn't
satisfying to them anymore, they still don't turn back to God.
They double down on idolatry.
And even though Jerusalem witnesses Samaria's demise, she doesn't learn anything from it.
In fact, she doubles down on the doubling down, and the whole process of more, more,
more actually becomes a chore to the two cities. They're abused and unloved by their lovers.
Verse 43 says they were worn out by adultery. Idols are exhausting. But God says it's too late
for them to repent now. He calls Ezekiel to judge them. They will drink the cup of his wrath.
They will finally bear the penalty for their sins.
One important thing to note about the books of the prophets
is how we have to treat their use of metaphor.
Remember how we talked about the fact
that the books of wisdom like Psalms and Proverbs
aren't necessarily giving us promises or prophecies?
Well, the books of prophecy have their own unique lens as well.
They aren't always literal.
They all involve a lot of metaphorical language and hyperbole,
and this is just another example of why we have to read things in context
and read them as they're intended to be read.
That's why, for the most part, we don't look at them with a microscope.
We zoom out to see the big picture the story is telling us.
It doesn't mean there might not be microscopic meaning there,
and it doesn't mean the Bible isn't true literally.
It just means the Bible isn't always literal.
Sometimes it's metaphorical.
Like yesterday, when God compared the people of Jerusalem
to draw since he's going to burn them up,
it doesn't necessarily mean they're going to die by fire.
The books of prophecy have a way of humbling us
because they refuse to let us be controlling
about all the details.
Moving on to chapter 24, to fully appreciate
what's happening in the first half of this chapter,
we have to take ourselves out of the modern age
where we can watch something happen
on the other side of the world in real time.
In Ezekiel's day, news took weeks or even months
to travel from one nation to their next-door neighbor.
So, Ezekiel, being nearly 900 miles away from Jerusalem when he's in exile in Babylon,
isn't getting a notification from CNN telling him Babylon has laid siege to Jerusalem.
God is telling him personally, and God says it's happening right now.
Talk about having a trusted news source.
But then God flips to the cooking channel. He's bringing up that cauldron and meat we first
talked about in chapter 11. God seems to be comparing Israel to the choicest cuts of meat.
But as they're being prepared, it becomes clear that they've all got E. coli for lack
of a better illustration, and that not only does the meat itself have to be discarded, but it's even ruined the cauldron, too.
And it has to be tossed into the fire as well.
In the midst of all this, as the meat is being removed, it's dripping with blood, and Israel
just leaves it out like, no big deal, this is just contaminated and unclean, and it's
out here for everyone to see an encounter.
No thanks.
The point of this metaphor seems to be that Israel isn't just ignoring God's laws,
but that they aren't even embarrassed or ashamed about it.
They feel no remorse.
Their hearts are hard.
Ezekiel's heart is not hard, but God's about to put him through the ringer nonetheless.
Once again, he gets an assignment to feel the pain of the situation Israel is about to
go through.
God tells him that his wife is going to die, and he's situation Israel is about to go through. God tells him
that his wife is going to die, and he's only allowed to mourn in private. The ancient Jews
had very detailed, prolonged ways of mourning the dead, but God is telling him to disregard
the traditions. And of course, this catches the attention of the exiles because it's
certainly strange behavior. But it opens up the conversation where Ezekiel lets them
know about the tragedy in Jerusalem,
and he tells them to respond in the same way, because ultimately, they don't have a right
to grieve since this is all the result of their own sins.
This is what they've been moving toward all along as they disregarded God's warnings
every step of the way.
At the end of today's reading, God tells Ezekiel that someday, when Jerusalem finally falls,
a fugitive will come to let Ezekiel know
that prophecy has been fulfilled.
Then Ezekiel won't be mute anymore.
Wait, he's still mute?
Then how has he been prophesying all this time?
Put a pin in this, we'll come back to it in a few days.
Today's God shot was a challenge, honestly.
Some days are harder than others.
It wasn't until my third trip through the text that something jumped out at me. And here's how I
connected it. A few years ago, when I lost my sister to cancer, the only people I wanted to talk
to were other people who had lost someone to cancer. They understood my loss in a way I couldn't
yet understand it myself. In God's sovereign timing, I've been on the receiving end of the compassion of those who
have gone before me.
And it makes me so grateful that God, in His great love and compassion, gave Judah a
prophet who understood her pain, how kind of God.
Ezekiel lost his wife right before the people of Judah lost everything.
Is it easy to be the Ezekiel to bear
the first burden of pain alone? No, it's horrible, but nothing in his words here indicates that he
was bitter about it. He knew there was a greater purpose in his loss. What he probably didn't know
is that his purpose extended far beyond commiserating with Israel and giving them a proper understanding of the situation at hand.
He was also imaging Christ,
the one who bears our burdens to people
2,500 years in the future.
He shows us a glimpse of God the Son
who knows exactly how hard it is to be human.
Jesus aches on our behalf,
He mourns and grieves with us all,
and still, he's where the joy is.
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